Posted on 10/20/2003 9:41:45 AM PDT by albertabound
We skipped Vietnam -- we shouldn't skip Iraq
William Watson National Post
Thursday, October 16, 2003
About halfway through the Vietnam War, historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. argued that the damage from incorrect application of the Munich analogy -- if we don't stop them now, we'll have to stop them later -- might eventually outweigh the damage from Neville Chamberlain's decision to appease Hitler by giving him Czechoslovakia in 1938. Schlesinger exaggerated. It will be a long time before anything out-costs the Second World War. But in analyzing what's going on in Iraq, the world in general and Canadians in particular are at similar risk of incorrectly applying the Vietnam analogy.
In retrospect, Canadians are happy with having sat out Vietnam, which they regard as the Americans' greatest Cold War folly. That satisfaction is now conditioning our approach to the reconstruction of Iraq. It shouldn't. Apart from the superficial similarity that Baghdad's suicide bombers are probably as terrifying to the troops on duty there as the Viet Cong's land mines were to the grunts who patrolled Mekong Delta jungles, in most ways Iraq is not at all like Vietnam.
Backward dominoes. Vietnam was about the domino theory. If we didn't fight them in Vietnam, we'd have to fight them in California. That turned out to be wrong. The communists did take Vietnam, but they never made it to California. In the current war, the biggest dominoes fell in the first two hours, in New York and Washington on Sept. 11. The rest of the war is about working backward down the domino path to find the people who set it up. That they prefer invisibility means many paths have to be worked at once. But this time round the dominoes are real.
The bad guys are really bad. We may have understood intellectually that Ho Chi Minh was no angel, but in those days, local despots' totalitarian ambitions were OK so long as they were cloaked in nationalism and anti-capitalism. In some circles, Saddam may once have been a romantic figure, but now that we've all done TV tours of his torture chambers and charnel pits, not even this generation's Jane Fondas can be duped. Many fewer people on the left (give credit where credit is due) tolerate totalitarians and growing numbers are willing to do something about it.
We're in it, too. As in Vietnam, the Australians sent troops and we stayed home. No wonder they get to visit the President's Texas ranch, which this time round is in Crawford, not Johnson City, where the LBJ Ranch was. But we fool ourselves if we think we're not in it, too. It may not be a clash of civilizations, but it's a clash of some members of Muslim civilization against ours (assuming "civilization" isn't too grand for what we all live in these days). And our self-declared enemies don't make fine distinctions. Canadians. Americans. Mr. Bin Laden, apparently unaware of our superior health care system and more caring welfare state, has decreed us a target too.
When Vietnam fell we got boat people, which was tough on the boat people but good for us. If we lose Iraq -- if it descends into anarchy or, even worse, suffers Saddam's return -- serious dominoes will be threatened here. Maybe things would have been better had the United States not invaded. Maybe in some parallel universe they didn't and things are better, even with Uday and Qusay still in charge. But in our universe that option has expired. Life is too dangerous for the self-indulgent satisfaction of "we told you so." To exercise our world-famous-in-Canada altruism, but also to protect our own national interest, we should be deploying every soft-power battalion we have to help the Iraqis.
58,000 is still far off. Iraq is a desert, not a jungle, in danger of becoming a swamp. But it's no Vietnam. In Vietnam the United States lost 58,000 service men and women. In 1968 alone, the death toll was 16,589. Sixteen thousand. That's 319 a week. So far the entire American loss for the second Iraq war is 332 combat and non-combat deaths.
The observances for our own Sgt. Short and Cpl. Beerenfenger were entirely appropriate. They were heroes. They should be honoured. But in wartime a certain callousness is required. If a few hundred or even a few thousand military deaths can prevent more World Trade Centers or worse, a responsible leader has no choice but to act.
Winning matters. The biggest difference between now and then, of course, is that we know how then ended. The Americans lost. Badly. But now Ho's heirs want into the WTO. They've got the fastest-growing economy in Southeast Asia and they're hungry for foreign investment. They're no Jeffersonians, but after three decades they're coming over to our side. Which makes the war all the more tragic. Losing evidently didn't matter.
But if we lose in Iraq, if Saddam does come back, if democracy and capitalism fail and the country sinks into permanent civil war, can we really be sure that 25 years from now all will have turned out for the best? And even if it has, what kind of 25 years will we have had getting there?
William Watson teaches economics at McGill University.
© Copyright 2003 National Post
Oh, really?
Then how was it we "lost" in Vietnam? Particularly since we left it in 1973, and the communists didn't take over until 1975.
We "lost" it in the US media. Which supported the communists, and still do their best to harm the US.
The communists DID make it to California. Ever heard of Berkley?
Yes, they did. They just weren't carrying guns and wearing black pajamas.
No it wasn't. It was about keeping South Vietnam out of communist hands until Lyndon Johnson could be reelected to a second term in 1968. Yes, I know LBJ declined to run in '68, but that's only because he knew Vietnam was too far gone politically, for him to be reelected.
The lesson of a president loosing a war, whether he started it or not, should not be lost on those who were politically aware during the Ford administration and the 1975 "Fall of Saigon". In the '76 election, Carter didn't beat Gerald Ford for president, the fall of Saigon on the six o'clock news did. Those that believe otherwise are unaware.
The comparison of Vietnam and Iraq is apples and oranges, both politically and strategically. Bush is putting his 2nd. term on the line to engage Arab terrorism. The Canadians, if they don't give up the Jones they have for Bush and join the anti-terror movement with the US, will render "Oh Canada" to be played as a lament, rather than an anthem.
No but they are wearing black robes and issuing communist edicts from the their place on the U.S. 9th. Circuit Court of Appeals.
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